I made a variation of one of my favorite invented recipes that I think came out really well. It was tri-color rotini pasta with julienned carrots and zucchini in a creamy sauce with shredded Parmesan cheese, lemon zest and fresh parsley. Sounds decadent, but guess what makes it creamy? Hummus!
I came up with adding the hummus to pasta sauce partly to create a lighter version of the garlicky cream sauce I love so much and partly to punch up the protein when Sweet P had less teeth. The vegetables were easy, thanks to my awesome new julienne peeler from Pampered Chef. That is, it was easy once I figured out how to use it without julienning my hand. It was supposed to be a vegetarian dish, after all.
I imagine this would be good with just about any vegetables and any shape pasta you like. Add some chicken or shrimp and dinner is done!
Initially, I had hoped the vegetables would get twisted into the rotini and therefore consumed along with the pasta. Unfortunately, the toddler is always smarter than me. I think some of the veggies may have accidentally been ingested, but she still won't eat the green noodles. Next I think I'll try the cut spaghetti I found at the store so everything will be essentially the same shape.
Update! It took me so long to get the original picture off of the camera that I have tried the recipe with the cut spaghetti. For those with picky eaters, the majority of the zucchini just disappeared into the pasta. You would never believe that there was a whole giant zucchini in the bowl. It's not as pretty because I didn't have any herbs on hand beside rosemary (which was already on the chicken), but Sweet P loved it!
I did my best on the amounts, but I am of the "that looks about right" school of measuring. If all else fails, taste it. Faincy chefs say they never serve anything without tasting it first. Simple, yet effective.
Ingredients:8 oz pasta
1 tbsp. olive oil
3 medium carrots, julienned
3 cloves of garlic, minced (more or less depending on your preference)
1 large or 2 medium zucchini, julienned
1/2 cup hummus
1 tbsp. lemon juice
1 tsp. lemon zest
pasta water or chicken or vegetable broth
1/3 cup Parmesan cheese
1/3 cup fresh parsley, chopped (or whatever herb you have available)
salt
pepper
Cook pasta as directed on package. While the pasta is cooking, saute the carrots with salt and pepper in olive oil over medium heat in a large skillet for 3 to 4 minutes. Add the garlic and cook for a minute or two more before adding the zucchini and a bit more salt and pepper. Cook for a few minutes more, until carrots are softened.
Reduce heat and add the hummus, lemon juice and lemon zest. Begin adding pasta water or broth and mix until a sauce has formed. (this would be a good place to taste and add more salt, pepper or lemon juice.) Stir in the Parmesan cheese and parsley, reserving some for garnish. Stir in the cooked pasta, adding more water or broth if it is too dry.
Put in a serving dish and garnish with remaining Parmesan cheese and parsley.
Showing posts with label herbs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label herbs. Show all posts
July 06, 2011
February 06, 2011
Recipe of the Week
I have something a little different for this weekend's recipe: a recipe for an ingredient!
The first time I visited Denmark in the spring of 2007, I was taken to a gourmet food shop in Copenhagen where I found a small packet of herb salt and a Weck jar. Perfect for a souvenirs in my opinion - small, relatively inexpensive and practical. The Weck jar is now the happy home of my brown sugar (and my brown sugar bear). I put the salt in my sea salt grinder when I got home and starting grinding it on everything.
It's awesome on scrambled eggs. I found that out when all I could manage for breakfast every day for about three weeks near the end of the first trimester was one egg scrambled in butter with the herb salt. I don't really remember what was in it besides rosemary, but I recreate my own now with my favorite herbs. Try it with your own favorite combination, but I highly recommend the rosemary. It adds a tasty kick to vegetables, rice, eggs, you name it.
Herbed Sea Salt
*amounts are approximate
1 cup coarse sea salt
2 tbsp. dried rosemary leaves
1 tbsp. dried thyme leaves
1 tbsp. dried basil leaves
Mix all ingredients together and store in an airtight container in a cool, dry place. Grind over everything!
The first time I visited Denmark in the spring of 2007, I was taken to a gourmet food shop in Copenhagen where I found a small packet of herb salt and a Weck jar. Perfect for a souvenirs in my opinion - small, relatively inexpensive and practical. The Weck jar is now the happy home of my brown sugar (and my brown sugar bear). I put the salt in my sea salt grinder when I got home and starting grinding it on everything.
It's awesome on scrambled eggs. I found that out when all I could manage for breakfast every day for about three weeks near the end of the first trimester was one egg scrambled in butter with the herb salt. I don't really remember what was in it besides rosemary, but I recreate my own now with my favorite herbs. Try it with your own favorite combination, but I highly recommend the rosemary. It adds a tasty kick to vegetables, rice, eggs, you name it.
Herbed Sea Salt
*amounts are approximate
1 cup coarse sea salt
2 tbsp. dried rosemary leaves
1 tbsp. dried thyme leaves
1 tbsp. dried basil leaves
Mix all ingredients together and store in an airtight container in a cool, dry place. Grind over everything!
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
